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President Donald Trump spent the first year of his second White House term signing a torrent of executive orders aimed at delivering on several major policy priorities, including slashing federal agency budgets and staffing, implementing a hard-line immigration crackdown and invoking emergency authority to impose steep tariffs on nearly every U.S. trading partner.

The pace of Trump’s executive actions has far outstripped that of his predecessors, allowing the administration to move quickly on campaign promises. But the blitz has also triggered a wave of lawsuits seeking to block or pause many of the orders, setting up a high-stakes confrontation over the limits of presidential power under Article II and when courts can — or should — intervene.

Lawsuits have challenged Trump’s most sweeping and consequential executive orders, ranging from a ban on birthright citizenship and transgender service members in the military to the legality of sweeping, DOGE-led government cuts and the president’s ability to ‘federalize’ and deploy thousands of National Guard troops.

Many of those questions remain unresolved. Only a few legal fights tied to Trump’s second-term agenda have reached final resolution, a point legal experts say is critical as the administration presses forward with its broader agenda.

Trump allies have argued the president is merely exercising his powers as commander in chief. 

Critics counter that the flurry of early executive actions warrants an additional level of legal scrutiny, and judges have raced to review a crushing wave of cases and lawsuits filed in response.

WINS:

Limits on nationwide injunctions

In June 2025, the Supreme Court sided with the Trump administration 6-3 in Trump v. CASA, a closely watched case centered on the power of district courts to issue so-called universal or nationwide injunctions blocking a president’s executive orders. 

Though the case ostensibly focused on birthright citizenship, arguments narrowly focused on the authority of lower courts’ ability to issue nationwide injunctions and did not wade into the legality of Trump’s order, which served as the legal pretext for the case. The decision had sweeping national implications, ultimately affecting the more than 310 federal lawsuits that had been filed at the time challenging Trump’s orders signed in his second presidential term.

Justices on the high court ultimately sided with U.S. Solicitor General John Sauer, who had argued to the court that universal injunctions exceeded lower courts’ Article III powers under the Constitution, telling justices that the injunctions ‘transgress the traditional bounds of equitable authority,’ and ‘create a host of practical problems.’

The Supreme Court largely agreed. Justices ruled that plaintiffs seeking nationwide relief must file their lawsuits as class action challenges. This prompted a flurry of action from plaintiffs in the weeks and months that followed as they raced to amend and refile relevant complaints to lower courts.

Firing independent agency heads 

The Supreme Court also signaled openness to expanding presidential authority over independent agencies.

Earlier in 2025, the justices granted Trump’s request to pause lower-court orders reinstating two Democratic appointees — National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) member Gwynne Wilcox and Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) member Cathy Harris, two Democrat appointees who were abruptly terminated by the Trump administration. It also suggested the Supreme Court is poised to pare back a 90-year-old precedent in Humphrey’s Executor, a 1935 ruling that prohibits certain heads of multi-member, congressionally created federal regulatory agencies from being fired without cause.

It is not the only issue in which the justices appeared inclined to side with Trump administration officials and either overturn or pare back Humphrey’s protections.

In December, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. Slaughter, a similar case centered on Trump’s attempt to fire a member of the Federal Trade Commission without cause. Justices seemed likely to allow the firing to proceed and to weaken Humphrey’s protections for similarly situated federal employees, though the extent that justices will move to dilute an already watered-down court ruling remains unclear.

The high court will also review another case centered on Trump’s ability to remove Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook early in 2026.

LOSSES:

Tariffs 

While it’s rarely helpful to speculate on how the Supreme Court might rule on a certain case, court watchers and legal experts overwhelmingly reached a similar consensus after listening to oral arguments in Learning Resources v. Trump, the case centered on Trump’s use of an emergency wartime law to enact his sweeping tariff plan. 

At issue in the case is Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to enact his steep 10% tariffs on most imports. The IEEPA law gives the president broad economic powers in the event of a national emergency tied to foreign threats. But it’s unclear if such conditions exist, as voiced by liberal and conservative justices in their review of the case earlier in 2025.

Several justices also noted that the statute does not explicitly reference tariffs or taxes, a point that loomed large during oral arguments.

A ruling against the administration would deliver a major blow to Trump’s signature economic policy. 

Court watchers and legal experts said after arguments that a Trump administration win could be more difficult than expected, though each cautioned it is hard to draw conclusions from roughly two hours of oral arguments, a fraction of the total time justices spend reviewing a case.

Jonathan Turley, a law professor and Fox News contributor, said in a blog post that the justices ‘were skeptical and uncomfortable with the claim of authority, and the odds still favored the challengers.’

‘However, there is a real chance of a fractured decision that could still produce an effective win for the administration,’ Turley added.

Brent Skorup, a legal fellow at the CATO Institute, told Fox News Digital in an emailed statement that members of the court seemed uncomfortable with expanding presidential power over tariffs.

‘Most justices appeared attentive to the risks of deferring to a president’s interpretation of an ambiguous statute and the executive branch ‘discovering’ new powers in old statutes,’ Skorup said.

Birthright citizenship

The Supreme Court has agreed to review Trump’s executive order restricting birthright citizenship, one of the most legally consequential actions of his second term.

At issue is an executive order Trump signed on his first day back in office that would deny automatic U.S. citizenship to most children born to illegal immigrant parents or parents with temporary legal status, a sweeping change critics say would upend roughly 150 years of constitutional precedent.

The order immediately sparked a flurry of lawsuits in 2025 filed by dozens of U.S. states and immigrants’ rights groups. Opponents have also argued that the effort is an unconstitutional and ‘unprecedented’ one that would threaten some 150,000 children in the U.S. born annually to parents of noncitizens and an estimated 4.4 million American-born children under 18 who are living with an illegal immigrant parent, according to data from the Pew Research Center. 

To date, no court has sided with the Trump administration’s interpretation of the 14th Amendment, though multiple district courts have blocked the order from taking force.

While it’s unclear how the high court might rule, the lower court rulings suggest the Trump administration might face a steep uphill battle in arguing the case before the Supreme Court in early 2026.

The court said in early December it will hold oral arguments in the case in 2026, between February and April, with a ruling expected by the end of June. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

President Donald Trump spent the first year of his second White House term signing a torrent of executive orders aimed at delivering on several major policy priorities, including slashing federal agency budgets and staffing, implementing a hard-line immigration crackdown and invoking emergency authority to impose steep tariffs on nearly every U.S. trading partner.

The pace of Trump’s executive actions has far outstripped that of his predecessors, allowing the administration to move quickly on campaign promises. But the blitz has also triggered a wave of lawsuits seeking to block or pause many of the orders, setting up a high-stakes confrontation over the limits of presidential power under Article II and when courts can — or should — intervene.

Lawsuits have challenged Trump’s most sweeping and consequential executive orders, ranging from a ban on birthright citizenship and transgender service members in the military to the legality of sweeping, DOGE-led government cuts and the president’s ability to ‘federalize’ and deploy thousands of National Guard troops.

Many of those questions remain unresolved. Only a few legal fights tied to Trump’s second-term agenda have reached final resolution, a point legal experts say is critical as the administration presses forward with its broader agenda.

Trump allies have argued the president is merely exercising his powers as commander in chief. 

Critics counter that the flurry of early executive actions warrants an additional level of legal scrutiny, and judges have raced to review a crushing wave of cases and lawsuits filed in response.

WINS:

Limits on nationwide injunctions

In June 2025, the Supreme Court sided with the Trump administration 6-3 in Trump v. CASA, a closely watched case centered on the power of district courts to issue so-called universal or nationwide injunctions blocking a president’s executive orders. 

Though the case ostensibly focused on birthright citizenship, arguments narrowly focused on the authority of lower courts’ ability to issue nationwide injunctions and did not wade into the legality of Trump’s order, which served as the legal pretext for the case. The decision had sweeping national implications, ultimately affecting the more than 310 federal lawsuits that had been filed at the time challenging Trump’s orders signed in his second presidential term.

Justices on the high court ultimately sided with U.S. Solicitor General John Sauer, who had argued to the court that universal injunctions exceeded lower courts’ Article III powers under the Constitution, telling justices that the injunctions ‘transgress the traditional bounds of equitable authority,’ and ‘create a host of practical problems.’

The Supreme Court largely agreed. Justices ruled that plaintiffs seeking nationwide relief must file their lawsuits as class action challenges. This prompted a flurry of action from plaintiffs in the weeks and months that followed as they raced to amend and refile relevant complaints to lower courts.

Firing independent agency heads 

The Supreme Court also signaled openness to expanding presidential authority over independent agencies.

Earlier in 2025, the justices granted Trump’s request to pause lower-court orders reinstating two Democratic appointees — National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) member Gwynne Wilcox and Merit Systems Protection Board (MSPB) member Cathy Harris, two Democrat appointees who were abruptly terminated by the Trump administration. It also suggested the Supreme Court is poised to pare back a 90-year-old precedent in Humphrey’s Executor, a 1935 ruling that prohibits certain heads of multi-member, congressionally created federal regulatory agencies from being fired without cause.

It is not the only issue in which the justices appeared inclined to side with Trump administration officials and either overturn or pare back Humphrey’s protections.

In December, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Trump v. Slaughter, a similar case centered on Trump’s attempt to fire a member of the Federal Trade Commission without cause. Justices seemed likely to allow the firing to proceed and to weaken Humphrey’s protections for similarly situated federal employees, though the extent that justices will move to dilute an already watered-down court ruling remains unclear.

The high court will also review another case centered on Trump’s ability to remove Federal Reserve Board Governor Lisa Cook early in 2026.

LOSSES:

Tariffs 

While it’s rarely helpful to speculate on how the Supreme Court might rule on a certain case, court watchers and legal experts overwhelmingly reached a similar consensus after listening to oral arguments in Learning Resources v. Trump, the case centered on Trump’s use of an emergency wartime law to enact his sweeping tariff plan. 

At issue in the case is Trump’s use of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to enact his steep 10% tariffs on most imports. The IEEPA law gives the president broad economic powers in the event of a national emergency tied to foreign threats. But it’s unclear if such conditions exist, as voiced by liberal and conservative justices in their review of the case earlier in 2025.

Several justices also noted that the statute does not explicitly reference tariffs or taxes, a point that loomed large during oral arguments.

A ruling against the administration would deliver a major blow to Trump’s signature economic policy. 

Court watchers and legal experts said after arguments that a Trump administration win could be more difficult than expected, though each cautioned it is hard to draw conclusions from roughly two hours of oral arguments, a fraction of the total time justices spend reviewing a case.

Jonathan Turley, a law professor and Fox News contributor, said in a blog post that the justices ‘were skeptical and uncomfortable with the claim of authority, and the odds still favored the challengers.’

‘However, there is a real chance of a fractured decision that could still produce an effective win for the administration,’ Turley added.

Brent Skorup, a legal fellow at the CATO Institute, told Fox News Digital in an emailed statement that members of the court seemed uncomfortable with expanding presidential power over tariffs.

‘Most justices appeared attentive to the risks of deferring to a president’s interpretation of an ambiguous statute and the executive branch ‘discovering’ new powers in old statutes,’ Skorup said.

Birthright citizenship

The Supreme Court has agreed to review Trump’s executive order restricting birthright citizenship, one of the most legally consequential actions of his second term.

At issue is an executive order Trump signed on his first day back in office that would deny automatic U.S. citizenship to most children born to illegal immigrant parents or parents with temporary legal status, a sweeping change critics say would upend roughly 150 years of constitutional precedent.

The order immediately sparked a flurry of lawsuits in 2025 filed by dozens of U.S. states and immigrants’ rights groups. Opponents have also argued that the effort is an unconstitutional and ‘unprecedented’ one that would threaten some 150,000 children in the U.S. born annually to parents of noncitizens and an estimated 4.4 million American-born children under 18 who are living with an illegal immigrant parent, according to data from the Pew Research Center. 

To date, no court has sided with the Trump administration’s interpretation of the 14th Amendment, though multiple district courts have blocked the order from taking force.

While it’s unclear how the high court might rule, the lower court rulings suggest the Trump administration might face a steep uphill battle in arguing the case before the Supreme Court in early 2026.

The court said in early December it will hold oral arguments in the case in 2026, between February and April, with a ruling expected by the end of June. 

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Aaron Rodgers insists he’s focused on trying to secure an AFC North title for the Pittsburgh Steelers during Week 18 of the NFL season. But he’s aware of the uncertainty that lies ahead in regards to the future of his storied career whenever this run ends.

‘I’m thinking about this week, but obviously I’m 42 years old and I’m on a one-year deal,’ Rodgers told reporters on Wednesday, Dec. 31. ‘So you know what the situation is. Whenever the season ends, I’ll be a free agent. So that’ll give me a lot of options if I still want to play. I mean, not a lot of options, but there’ll be options, I would think, maybe one or two, if I decide I still want to play.

‘I’ve enjoyed this experience, and everybody in Pittsburgh has been fantastic to me on and off the field,’ he added. ‘And it’s really what I was hoping for this experience was, it’s been even better than I was hoping.’

Rodgers’ latest comments come in the lead up to the Steelers’ ‘Sunday Night Football’ showdown against the Baltimore Ravens. The winner will be crowned AFC North champion and host an NFL playoff game during wild-card weekend. The loser will be eliminated from postseason contention. The Cleveland Browns upset Pittsburgh in Week 17 once Rodgers’ attempt at a game-tying touchdown drive came up short.

Rodgers previously indicated when he signed with the Steelers in June that this could be his final NFL season, telling ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ at the time, ‘I’m pretty sure this is it.’

But the 21-year veteran reflected positively on his experience in Pittsburgh on Wednesday, and didn’t shut down the possibility of a return next season – with the Steelers or elsewhere.

‘You always think about the what-if and the alternative timelines of your life,’ Rodgers said. ‘But if I hadn’t taken this path, I never would have met so many guys in the locker room who I now call close friends and wouldn’t have the experiences and the memories on the field, wouldn’t have been able to be in the room with (QB coach) Tom Arth again and (assistant QB coach Matt Baker) and be able to play for Arthur Smith and Mike Tomlin. And I feel like there would be a little hole in my life missing without having this chapter. So I’m thankful for this time.’

Rodgers told reporters he would speak with his wife about a potential retirement decision, but otherwise kept the details of how he’ll proceed after the season to himself.

Rodgers spent 18 seasons with the Green Bay Packers before an unsuccessful and controversial two-year stint with the New York Jets prior to joining the Steelers. He has thrown for 3,028 yards with 23 touchdowns and seven interceptions, while completing 65.6% of his passes with Pittsburgh this season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Aaron Rodgers insists he’s focused on trying to secure an AFC North title for the Pittsburgh Steelers during Week 18 of the NFL season. But he’s aware of the uncertainty that lies ahead in regards to the future of his storied career whenever this run ends.

‘I’m thinking about this week, but obviously I’m 42 years old and I’m on a one-year deal,’ Rodgers told reporters on Wednesday, Dec. 31. ‘So you know what the situation is. Whenever the season ends, I’ll be a free agent. So that’ll give me a lot of options if I still want to play. I mean, not a lot of options, but there’ll be options, I would think, maybe one or two, if I decide I still want to play.

‘I’ve enjoyed this experience, and everybody in Pittsburgh has been fantastic to me on and off the field,’ he added. ‘And it’s really what I was hoping for this experience was, it’s been even better than I was hoping.’

Rodgers’ latest comments come in the lead up to the Steelers’ ‘Sunday Night Football’ showdown against the Baltimore Ravens. The winner will be crowned AFC North champion and host an NFL playoff game during wild-card weekend. The loser will be eliminated from postseason contention. The Cleveland Browns upset Pittsburgh in Week 17 once Rodgers’ attempt at a game-tying touchdown drive came up short.

Rodgers previously indicated when he signed with the Steelers in June that this could be his final NFL season, telling ‘The Pat McAfee Show’ at the time, ‘I’m pretty sure this is it.’

But the 21-year veteran reflected positively on his experience in Pittsburgh on Wednesday, and didn’t shut down the possibility of a return next season – with the Steelers or elsewhere.

‘You always think about the what-if and the alternative timelines of your life,’ Rodgers said. ‘But if I hadn’t taken this path, I never would have met so many guys in the locker room who I now call close friends and wouldn’t have the experiences and the memories on the field, wouldn’t have been able to be in the room with (QB coach) Tom Arth again and (assistant QB coach Matt Baker) and be able to play for Arthur Smith and Mike Tomlin. And I feel like there would be a little hole in my life missing without having this chapter. So I’m thankful for this time.’

Rodgers told reporters he would speak with his wife about a potential retirement decision, but otherwise kept the details of how he’ll proceed after the season to himself.

Rodgers spent 18 seasons with the Green Bay Packers before an unsuccessful and controversial two-year stint with the New York Jets prior to joining the Steelers. He has thrown for 3,028 yards with 23 touchdowns and seven interceptions, while completing 65.6% of his passes with Pittsburgh this season.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

As 2025 ends, tensions between China and Taiwan are higher — and more overt — than at any point in recent years, fueled by expanded U.S. military support for Taipei, increasingly bold warnings from regional allies, and Chinese military drills that look less like symbolism and more like rehearsal.

Beijing has spent the year steadily increasing pressure on Taiwan through large-scale military exercises, air and naval incursions, and pointed political messaging, while Washington and its allies have responded with sharper deterrence signals that China now openly labels as interference.

The result is a more volatile status quo — one where the risk of miscalculation has grown, even as most analysts stop short of predicting an imminent Chinese invasion.

A year of escalating pressure

China capped off 2025 with what it described as its largest Taiwan-focused military exercises to date, launching expansive drills in December that included live-fire elements and simulated island encirclement operations.

The exercises followed a familiar pattern seen throughout the year: People’s Liberation Army aircraft and ships operating closer to Taiwan with greater frequency, reinforcing Beijing’s claim of sovereignty while testing Taipei’s response capacity.

Unlike earlier shows of force, the late-year drills were widely interpreted as practice for coercive scenarios short of outright war — particularly a blockade or quarantine designed to strangle Taiwan economically and politically without triggering immediate global conflict.

Chinese officials explicitly tied the escalation to Washington’s actions, pointing to a massive U.S. arms package approved in December — valued at roughly $11 billion and described as one of the largest such sales to Taiwan in years — as proof of what Beijing calls ‘foreign interference.’

Chinese officials have been unusually blunt in their response.

‘Any external forces that attempt to intervene in the Taiwan issue or interfere in China’s internal affairs will surely smash their heads bloody against the iron walls of the Chinese People’s Liberation Army,’ China’s Taiwan Affairs Office said in a Monday statement. 

The arms package continued the U.S. push to strengthen Taiwan’s asymmetric defenses, including missiles, drones and systems designed to complicate a Chinese assault rather than match Beijing weapon-for-weapon.

Taipei welcomed the support but remained cautious in its public response, emphasizing restraint while warning that Chinese military pressure has become routine rather than exceptional.

Japan steps into the frame

One of the most consequential shifts in 2025 came not from Washington or Taipei, Taiwan, but from Tokyo.

In November, Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi made unusually direct remarks linking a potential Taiwan contingency to Japan’s own security, suggesting that an attack on Taiwan could trigger collective self-defense considerations under Japanese law.

The comments marked one of the clearest acknowledgments yet from a sitting Japanese leader that a Taiwan conflict would not remain a bilateral issue between Beijing and Taipei.

China reacted angrily, accusing Japan of abandoning its post-war restraint and aligning itself with U.S. efforts to contain Beijing. The rhetoric underscored a growing Chinese concern: that any move on Taiwan would draw in a widening coalition of U.S. allies.

That concern has also been reinforced by U.S. treaty commitments to the Philippines, where Chinese and Philippine vessels clashed repeatedly in the South China Sea throughout the year, raising fears of a multifront crisis.

Washington’s deterrence gamble

For the United States, 2025 was defined by a balancing act — reinforcing Taiwan without triggering the very conflict Washington seeks to prevent.

In addition to the December arms package, U.S. officials repeatedly reaffirmed that peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait are vital U.S. interests, while avoiding any explicit shift away from long-standing strategic ambiguity.

The Pentagon’s annual report on China, released late in 2025, reiterated that U.S. defense assessments see the Chinese military developing capabilities that could enable it to fight and win a war over Taiwan by 2027 — a benchmark that has increasingly shaped U.S. and allied planning.

U.S. officials, however, have also cautioned that military readiness does not equal intent, warning against treating exercises or procurement timelines as a countdown clock to war.

Is an invasion coming?

The question hanging over the region — and Washington — is whether China is moving closer to launching a full-scale invasion of Taiwan.

The evidence cuts both ways.

On one hand, the scale and sophistication of Chinese military activity around Taiwan has grown noticeably, with drills emphasizing joint operations, rapid mobilization and isolation of the island. Beijing’s rhetoric has also hardened, portraying reunification as increasingly urgent and framing U.S. involvement as an existential threat.

On the other hand, an amphibious invasion of Taiwan would be among the most complex military operations in modern history, carrying enormous political, economic and military risks for China — whose armed forces have not fought a major war since its 1979 invasion of Vietnam.

Many defense analysts argue that Beijing has strong incentives to continue applying pressure through gray-zone tactics — cyber operations, economic coercion, legal warfare and military intimidation — rather than crossing the threshold into open war.

The December drills reinforced that view, highlighting blockade-style scenarios that could test Taiwan and its partners without immediately triggering a shooting war.

The road ahead

As 2026 approaches, the Taiwan Strait remains a flashpoint where deterrence and coercion are colliding more frequently and more visibly.

The most widely held assessment among U.S. and regional officials is that while the risk of conflict is rising — particularly as China approaches its 2027 military readiness goals — an invasion is not yet the most likely near-term outcome.

Instead, the danger lies in sustained pressure, miscalculation and crisis escalation, especially as more actors — from Japan to the Philippines — become directly implicated in the Taiwan equation.

For now, 2025 ends with no shots fired across the Taiwan Strait — but with fewer illusions about how close the region may be to its most serious test in decades.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

‘I am heartbroken to share that I will miss this Unrivaled season,’ Collier wrote in an Instagram post. ‘I have fought hard over the last few months to be back with my [Lunar] Owls and was devastated to be told by my team of doctors that surgery was the best path forward. I will still be cheering on my teammates every step of the way, and I will continue to work relentlessly with the rest of the players and our staff to push our sport forward and raise the bar for women’s basketball.’

Collier suffered multiple ankle injuries during the 2025 WNBA season. On August 2, she injured her ankle during a 111-58 win over the Las Vegas Aces and missed three weeks. She ended up missing 11 games, impacting the MVP race. Forward A’ja Wilson won with Collier finishing as runner-up.

Collier finished the regular season with an historic 50-40-90, with a 50% field goal percentage, 40% 3-point field goal percentage and 90% free throw percentage. Elena Delle Donne is the only other WNBA player to achieve the feat.

During Game 3 of the WNBA semifinals against the Phoenix Mercury, Collier suffered a Grade 2 tear of three ankle ligaments and shin muscle after a collision with Alyssa Thomas.

‘I did not need surgery,’ Collier said in December when asked about her offseason recovery during Unrivaled’s media day. ‘I am still working to get back to a hundred percent, but I’ve been doing my rehab every day. It’s gotten way, way better. So, I’m just taking it every day at a time, and I’m excited to get back out there.’

The Minnesota forward was also asked if she would be ready by January. She replied, ‘That’s the goal,’ but did not elaborate further. With Collier out for the Unrivaled season, Golden State forward signed Temi Fagbenle, who signed a multiyear contract with the league, will take her place on the Lunar Owls.

Unrivaled begins on January 5. The Lunar Owls play the Rose at 8 p.m. ET.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

New Orleans Saints wide receiver Chris Olave will miss the team’s Week 18 season finale against the Atlanta Falcons after being diagnosed with a blood clot in his lung, according to multiple reports on Thursday, Jan 1.

The 25-year-old did not participate in the team’s Wednesday practice and the official injury report listed him as out due to an illness. Olave was able to finish the Saints’ Week 17 win over the Tennessee Titans, logging eight catches for 119 yards and a touchdown.

Olave will finish his fourth season with the Saints with a career-best 1,163 receiving yards and nine touchdowns. The Ohio State product missed the final nine games of the 2024 NFL season after suffering multiple concussions. Olave admitted last month the head injuries forced him to contemplate retirement. He told reporters after the Saints’ fourth win in a row this past weekend that playing all 17 games was one of his ‘main goals’ for this season.

Olave is eligible for a contract extension this offseason and set to make more than $15 million next season after the Saints picked up the fifth-year option on his rookie contract. He could be an unrestricted free agent following the 2026 season if he and New Orleans don’t come to terms on a new deal.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

First-year NC State basketball coach Will Wade passionately defended Darrion Williams after the Wolfpack’s win over Wake Forest on Wednesday, Dec. 31 as the five-star transfer draws criticism for his inconsistent play as of late.

Williams, one of the top-rated transfer portal recruits last offseason after averaging over 15 points per game at Texas Tech in 2024-25, is 10-of-37 shooting in his last three games combined. He has been held to 11 points or fewer in five of NC State’s last six games.

Wade said everybody needs to ‘shut the hell up about him’ after NC State’s 70-57 win over Wake Forest in response to a question on Williams’ recent struggles.

‘Absolutely zero,’ Wade said of his concern level with Williams. ‘I’m tired of hearing about fricking Darrion. He’s (expletive) playing well, alright. It’s a terrible question. It’s a terrible question. Let me be frank with you. He affects winning. And everybody’s out here (expletive) about him and stuff, he affects winning.

‘He was plus-13 against Ole Miss and didn’t hit a shot. And everybody’s acting like the world’s caving in. The guy’s a damn good player. He didn’t shoot it well today. What’d he have? He had zero turnovers for us today. Darrion Williams. Six rebounds, four assists, zero turnovers. Everybody needs to shut the hell up about him. He’s a damn good player and the shot’s going to fall.

‘I’m tired of answering questions about him. He’s really good. We’re thankful to have him.’

Wade mentioned Williams is playing through a shoulder injury that he claimed is severe enough for most players to sit out from, especially those getting paid as much as Williams.

Williams is shooting 41% from 3-point range this season, up from his 34% mark a season ago. He’s also shooting 45.9% from the field, despite his recent shooting struggles. He shot 43.9% for the year last season at Texas Tech.

It’s not the first time Wade, who led McNeese to a first-round NCAA Tournament win last season, has had a passionate postgame press conference. Wade called out his team’s ‘casual personalities’ after NC State’s 108-72 win over Texas Southern on Dec. 17.

Williams scored 20 or more points in three of his four games during Texas Tech’s run to the Elite Eight last season, also averaging two steals and 2.8 blocks per game. Wade and the Wolfpack are hoping he gets back to that level once healthy.

‘I’m tired of people picking on the kid, man,’ Wade said. ‘I got it. He makes a lot of money for us, but there are about 10 other schools that have paid as much or more than we paid for the kid. The kid is not perfect. I understand that. The kid is not perfect, but he is a damn good player, and we are lucky to have him at NC State.

‘He picked us over a lot of schools with a lot better situations than we had at the time he picked us. Let’s be fricking appreciative. Let’s support the kid. Let’s help the kid.’

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Minnesota Timberwolves star Anthony Edwards didn’t have the homecoming he hoped for during a New Year’s Eve game against the Atlanta Hawks, and he made it obvious with a premature exit.

Edwards left the Timberwolves bench and the court at Atlanta’s State Farm Arena during the fourth quarter of Minnesota’s 126-102 loss to the Hawks on Wednesday, Dec. 31 after coach Chris Finch elected to pull the team’s starters. Edwards’ departure, in the midst of a timeout with 7 minutes, 52 seconds remaining and Atlanta leading by 29 points, was unplanned and unapproved, Finch confirmed afterwards.

‘Obviously frustrated with the performance and rightfully so, but he needs to stay out on the floor and root for his team,’ Finch told reporters.

Edwards, an Atlanta native who played one season at the University of Georgia before becoming the No. 1 overall pick in the 2020 NBA Draft, declined to speak to reporters following the game. He had a team-best 30 points against the Hawks. He reportedly had friends and family at the game, including his grandfather.

Edwards was also ejected in overtime of Minnesota’s 142-138 loss at Denver on Christmas day for arguing calls at the end of a 44-point performance. The Timberwolves have lost three of their past four games heading into Saturday’s game at the Miami Heat.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Rose Bowl Game is one of the most iconic settings in sports, as the Southern California sunset hits the San Gabriel Mountains to create a beautiful New Year’s Day visual as the game reaches its end.

However, it’s not looking like that scenic moment will happen on Jan. 1, 2026.

The 2026 Rose Bowl features No. 1 Indiana taking on No. 9 Alabama in a College Football Playoff quarterfinal matchup, and it will be a game unlike most with a storm coming as the new year begins. As a result, heavy rain is expected in Pasadena, California, which could not only ruin the views, but have a major impact on the game itself.

‘Rain expected to close out 2025 and usher in 2026 could soak New Year’s events in Pasadena, including the Rose Parade and college football,’ AccuWeather said on Dec. 31.

Here’s what to know for the Rose Bowl Game forecast:

Indiana-Alabama Rose Bowl weather forecast

The National Weather Service said ‘a strong winter storm will bring moderate to heavy rainfall’ to Pasadena and Southern California beginning on Wednesday, Dec. 31 and Thursday, Jan. 1, 2026. Rain already hit the region early New Year’s Eve. The NWS has a flood watch in effect from Dec. 31 at 10 p.m. PT through 10 p.m. PT on Jan. 1.

Rain and thunderstorms are possible in the area before 4 p.m. PT and there is a chance of showers and thunderstorms after 4 p.m. ‘Some of the storms could produce heavy rainfall,’ the NWS added.

The field was covered in tarp the morning of New Year’s Day.

‘Wear rain gear for the parade and football game,’ AccuWeather says for people attending.

Will it rain during the Rose Bowl?

Yes, the National Weather Service said there is a 100% chance of precipitation.

Rose Bowl hourly forecast

The Rose Bowl will kick off at 1 p.m. PT/4 p.m. ET, but the rain will begin well before the game starts and is expected to continue throughout the contest.

Here’s an hourly breakdown of weather, according to AccuWeather, as of Dec. 31:

All times Pacific

  • 11 a.m.: 60 degrees (rain, 73% chance of precipitation)
  • 12 p.m.: 61 degrees (cloudy, 49% chance of precipitation)
  • 1 p.m.: 62 degrees (showers, 60% chance of precipitation)
  • 2 p.m.: 64 degrees (showers, 60% chance of precipitation)
  • 3 p.m.: 63 degrees (cloudy, 49% chance of precipitation)
  • 4 p.m.: 62 degrees (cloudy, 34% chance of precipitation)
  • 5 p.m.: 61 degrees (cloudy, 34% chance of precipitation)
  • 6 p.m.: 59 degrees (cloudy, 37% chance of precipitation)

What Indiana, Alabama said about Rose Bowl rain

Both coaches were asked on Dec. 31 about the potential weather effects for the contest. Alabama coach Kalen DeBoer said his team hasn’t played in rain much this season and it will have to adjust based on the severity of it.

‘You try to prepare and practice with a wet ball and things like that, whether it’s snapping the football, catching the football, throwing it, whatever it is. But in the end, we’ve just got to adapt,’ DeBoer said. ‘Obviously ball security and turnovers are something that I think everyone would acknowledge would be critical when the factors could be rain like it looks to be.’

‘I don’t see it changing our game plan very much,’ he said.

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